Suoratoistopalvelut (2)

Juonikuvaukset(1)

Valkoihoinen Chris Mattson (Patrick Wilson) muuttaa tummaihoisen vaimonsa, Lisan (Kerry Washington), kanssa uuteen kotiin. Naapurissa asuva rasistinen poliisi Abel Turner (Samuel L. Jackson) tekee pian nuorenparin elämän hankalaksi. (SBS Discovery Media)

Arvostelut (3)

POMO 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti How do you freshen up the most hackneyed thriller plots about psychopathic neighbors so that you can sell them with a straight face and the audience eats them up again? We set them in the historical period everyone associates with a natural disaster, more specifically the California wildfires. Samuel L. Jackson tries very hard and the psychology of the characters is solidly constructed, but this psychology is superficial in the Hollywood mainstream fashion, its only purpose being to entertain us over a tub of popcorn on a Saturday night. Not that I’m complaining; we grew with this and keep consuming it on a daily basis, but for God’s sake – would at least one original plot twist be too much to ask from the screenwriters? ()

3DD!3 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Samuel L. Jackson saves this from being simply a mediocre thriller about crumbling relations with the neighbors. Personally, what I enjoyed most were the spiteful tricks that the two played on each other (especially what Jackson got up to). And the approaching forest fire fitted very nicely into the story. ()

D.Moore 

kaikki käyttäjän arvostelut

englanti Quite a good film with the perfectly written and acted character of Samuel L. Jackson. I was disappointed that towards the end the plot started to repeat itself a bit and go in a circle that brought nothing new. i.e., "the bad neighbour does something - the good neighbour tells him not to do it - the bad neighbour doesn't give a damn and keeps doing it and invents something new". The fire motif is a good idea, and I liked the magical music. It's a shame that at the expense of the sophistication of Jackson's racist, stunted cop, the script did little to make Patrick Wilson's character even remotely sympathetic. ()